Please provide an example of the file. You could use awk to separate the month, day and year
That will print the second field separated by '-'. If you wish to print the other fields just use $1 or $3 instead. To print more than one field, "print $2,$3".
Thank you for your response.
Here is a (hypothetical) example of what is in our file:
Bill Adams: ABC Contracting: 11-14-07: 6919408:314-463-2219
Bill Adams: ABC Contracting: 2-22-07: 4109663:314-463-2219
Bill Adams: ABC Contracting: 11-6-07: 6918997:314-463-2219
Steve Leitch: ERB Equipment: 11-6-07: 6918967:314-225-6403
There are thousands of records and I only want the ones from 11-07 and I only want the name and company of the contractor to be displayed once in my output.
Can anyone give me a hand with some questions by e-mailing me directly, so I can relay the questions inorder. I really would appreciate anyone that can help.
Thank You in advance, I am online and will reply instantly.
Charley
<email removed> (5 Replies)
Using the last, uniq, sort and cut commands, determine how many times the different users have logged in.
I know how to use the last command and cut command...
i came up with last | cut -f1 -d" " | uniq
i dont know if this is right, can someone please help me... thanks (1 Reply)
how to cut for pattern in the file and then count each occurance?
say, each line has unique pattern and u want to grep but at last, you want to see how many of them occur?
say,
cut -d'\" -f15 filename | sort -? or.. do i need to use sed or something..
i need to count lets say
how... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a small problem, hope you can help me out here.
I have a file that contains the same format of lines in 99% of the cases.
906516 XYZ.NNN V 0000 20070711164648 userID1 userID2 hostname 20070711164641
There are unfortunately several lines with these... (5 Replies)
I have the following requirement.
1. I have to concatenate the 10 fixed width files.
2. sort based on first 10 characters
3. after that i have remove first 10 chacters from the file.
can you please tell me how to do it.
Thanks in Advance
Samba (1 Reply)
<B>andan100:Anders:Andersson:800101-1234:TNCCC_1:TDDB46 TDDB80:berbe101:Bertil:Bertilsson:800102-1234:TNCCC_1:TDDB46 TDDB80:The top is how it looks right now I want it t look
like this under and I want it to be sorted. I have tried with cut -f -d studenter.txt and so on but it still doesnt work... (2 Replies)
Please help.
I have a file containing rows of information. The row needs to be broken down into blocks of 5 and then sorted.
Example:
10381
1042010046 ... (4 Replies)
While looping through a file, I am cutting different length of characters (based on their length) like columns and want to produce the output in a separate file with different columns being separated by a comma.
How to achieve this with an online command. I don't want to create multiple variables... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have identified how to use command chaining as per below on a file, to capture the header of a file, as well as the line containing the C: drive.
$ cat test.txt
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
rootfs 237G 153G 84G 65% /
none 237G 153G 84G ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: sand1234
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
acctcon2
acctcon(1M)acctcon(1M)NAME
acctcon, acctcon1, acctcon2 - connect-time accounting
SYNOPSIS
[options]
[options]
DESCRIPTION
The command converts a sequence of login/logoff records read from its standard input to a sequence of records, one per login session. Its
input should normally be redirected from or Its output is ASCII, giving device, user ID, login name, prime connect time (seconds), non-
prime connect time (seconds), session starting time (numeric), and starting date and time. Prime connect time is defined as the connect
time within a specific prime period on a non-holiday weekday (Monday through Friday). The starting and ending time of the prime period and
the year's holidays are defined in file
expects as input a sequence of login session records, produced by and converts them into total accounting records (see format in acct(4)).
combines the functionality of and into one program. It takes the same input format as and writes the same output as
recognizes the following options:
Print input only, showing line name, login name,
and time (in both numeric and date/time formats).
maintains a list of lines on which users are logged in.
When it reaches the end of its input, it emits a session record for each line that still appears to be active. It
normally assumes that its input is a current file, so that it uses the current time as the ending time for each ses-
sion still in progress. The flag causes it to use, instead, the last time found in its input, thus ensuring reason-
able and repeatable numbers for non-current files.
and recognize the following options:
file is created to contain a summary of line usage showing line name, number of minutes used, percentage of total elapsed
time used, number of sessions charged, number of logins, and number of logoffs. This file helps track line usage,
identify bad lines, and find software and hardware oddities. Hang-up, termination of (see login(1)), and termination
of the login shell each generate logoff records, so that the number of logoffs is often three to four times the num-
ber of sessions. See init(1M) and utmp(4).
file is filled with an overall record for the accounting period, giving starting time, ending time, number of reboots, and
number of date changes.
When this option is used, the records of the type found in
are read from the specified input.
EXAMPLES
These commands are typically used as shown below. The file is created only for the use of commands described by the acctprc(1M) manual
entry:
or
With option:
or
Note:
The file can be either or a file containing records of the type found in
WARNINGS
The line usage report is confused by date changes. Use (see fwtmp(1M)) to correct this situation.
FILES SEE ALSO login(1), acct(1M), acctcms(1M), acctcom(1M), acctmerg(1M), acctprc(1M), acctsh(1M), fwtmp(1M), init(1M), utmpd(1M), runacct(1M), acct(2),
getbwent(3C), acct(4), utmp(4).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE acctcon(1M)